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The Great Space Hunt

4 Extra Debut. Jolyon Jenkins talks to the enthusiasts who scan the skies to protect life on earth from the threat of asteroids. From 2014.

In 2013 an asteroid with the explosive power of 40 nuclear bombs exploded in the sky over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk.

No one saw it coming, because it was one of the smaller asteroids, and it was approaching from the wrong direction. Luckily, it exploded high up in the atmosphere, and the only injuries were from the flying glass of thousands of broken windows. If it had exploded lower down, it could have been a different story.

Subsequent research suggested that there are 10 times more asteroids out there like the Chelyabinsk one than we previously thought. Hardly any of them have been found. NASA is trying to find all the big asteroids that could potentially wipe out life on earth, and is making good progress, but the smaller ones are virtually unknown.

So what is Britain doing about the asteroid threat? At the top of a hill in mid-Wales is an observatory called Spaceguard UK. It鈥檚 run by a retired army major called Jay Tate. Despite being officially designated as the 鈥淣ational Near Earth Objects Information Centre鈥, it gets no state funding and subsists only from Mr Tate鈥檚 pension, and the sales of keyrings and pencils in the gift shop. Mr Tate is one of an army of amateur astronomers who scans the skies looking for asteroids that might come close to the earth. The safety of the earth is in these amateurs' hands, he says.

One of the most prolific asteroid observers in the world is Peter Birtwhistle, who operates from a hut in his Berkshire garden. He spends over 100 nights a year looking for asteroids, often barely sleeping. When he finds one, he sends his observations to the Minor Planets Centre at Harvard, which logs known asteroids.

Despite this, only two incoming asteroids have ever been detected before they arrived. One exploded over the Sudanese desert in 2008; the world got a few hours鈥 warning because Gareth Williams at the Minor Planets Centre was woken in the night by his dog needing to go outside, and happened to check his computer.

Jolyon Jenkins speaks to the unsung army of people who are trying to keep us safe from the threat from outer space, and asks whether it鈥檚 right that we depend so much on enthusiasts.

Presenter/producer: Jolyon Jenkins

First broadcast on 大象传媒 Radio 4 in March 2014.

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Thu 15 Apr 2021 02:30

Broadcasts

  • Wed 26 Mar 2014 11:00
  • Mon 7 Apr 2014 21:00
  • Wed 14 Apr 2021 14:30
  • Thu 15 Apr 2021 02:30

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